RogerM
Carpal tunnel level member
- Location
- Louisville,KY USA
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Did you see @rico when you looked up?My son and I just got back from this placeView attachment 99854
Awesome! Where at?My son and I just got back from this placeView attachment 99854


I know you are limiting your study to the Ashville area but you may want to consider one thta is in my neighborhood of middle Georgia. We have a City owned Willow Oak that is 84" DBH that a third of the canopy was destroyed by straight line winds in spring of 2016. It is retrenching beautifully. I am happy to send you some photos if you want.Today is a fun day. I’m going around with my friend Mike photographing giant trees for what I hope will be a book (I’m going to pace out the shooting and writing and hopefully finish in the summer). It’ll include some of the lessons I’m gleaning from studying giant trees. Mike is a deep tree nerd, the kind who knows about whiskeys made with fig leaves and other obscure folk knowledge. He photographs regularly for NYT.
This is the largest tree in the Asheville area I know about so far. It’s an 84” Silver maple in the backyard of a friend of a friend. I’m working with the Treasured Tree database, as well as an inventory from the Biltmore Estate. I was surprised to see their largest diameter tree is a 66” sycamore. In the urban environment, I have been finding many trees larger than that.
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Very interesting. Response growth after storm damage is a whole separate study. That would be a great one to look at. A friend recently sent me a photo of a sugar maple in VT that tipped over in a hurricane in 1939. Still going strongI know you are limiting your study to the Ashville area but you may want to consider one thta is in my neighborhood of middle Georgia. We have a City owned Willow Oak that is 84" DBH that a third of the canopy was destroyed by straight line winds in spring of 2016. It is retrenching beautifully. I am happy to send you some photos if you want.